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  1. This is the YouTube channel of St Edmund Hall (more commonly known as Teddy Hall) - a friendly, vibrant college that's part of the University of Oxford. Our ...

  2. James has been the Librarian at the Hall since May 2018. He came to St Edmund Hall from Balliol College where he was Assistant Librarian from December 2015. Previously he has worked at the International Institute of Strategic Studies and at Lambeth Palace Library in London, as well as the Taylorian Library in Oxford.

  3. St Edmund Hall does not offer detailed individual feedback to applicants. It should be noted that the Oxford undergraduate admissions process is extremely competitive. As the number of applications increases year-on-year the number of places available remains limited, and so increasing numbers of applicants face disappointment.

  4. General History. Under its earliest known Principals St. Edmund Hall would seem to have been a resort for West Country students. When the hall first appears as an academical hall in the rentals of Oseney Abbey its rent amounts to 35 s .; after the extension of its site in 1318 its rent was raised to 46 s. 8 d.

  5. St Edmund Hall has provided an exceptional environment for teaching and research for over 800 years. Today, the Hall’s inclusive environment is made up of over 400 undergraduates, 350 graduate students and academic staff from over 70 countries. Our alumni community of over 11,000 Aularians live in 100 countries around the world, and their ...

  6. 15. Jan. 2019 · David Priestland is Vice-Principal of St Edmund Hall and Professor of Modern History, and is interested in the history of two of the most influential global ideologies of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, communism and market liberalism (‘neoliberalism’), especially in the communist and post-communist worlds. In April 2023, David ...

  7. St Edmund Hall served as a residence for undergraduates, rather than a fully-fledged college. Thus, it has no official founder and had no endowments or set of statutes like other colleges. The site was owned by a succession of church officials, and from 1272 until the Dissolution of the Monasteries it was owned by Oseney Abbey. The abbey later purchased a neighbouring plot of land from ...